Medical Case 03 Vincent Brody GRQ Edited PDF

Title Medical Case 03 Vincent Brody GRQ Edited
Author Dayra Guevara
Course Pharmacology
Institution Miami University
Pages 2
File Size 57.1 KB
File Type PDF
Total Downloads 31
Total Views 146

Summary

V SIM CASE ...


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Medical Case 3: Vincent Brody Guided Reflection Questions 1. How did the scenario make you feel? This scenario made me feel comfortable and it helped a lot that the patient was cooperative and willing to answer questions regarding his condition.

2. When a patient develops a rapid onset of shortness of breath, what are the nurse’s immediate priorities? Assessing patent airway and breathing is the number one priority. If the patient needs any oxygen, provide while contacting the physician. It is vital to sit the patient upright and identify the reason for his shortness of breath and addresses it. Next is to auscultate the lungs for presence of any abnormal sounds like crackles, wheezing, or absent breath sounds. 3. What assessment findings would indicate that the patient’s condition is worsening?

Various things can point to a condition worsening for example, SaO2 dropping, confusion and drowsiness, changes in color like cyanosis in lips or fingernails, pallor in skin tone. Changes in lung sounds, patient reporting chest tightness or shortness of breath.

4. Review Vincent Brody’s laboratory results. Which results are abnormal? Discuss how these results relate to his clinical presentation and chronic disease process. The patient’s Arterial Blood Gas came back with an elevated HCO3 and PCO2 but the pH was within normal range. The patient may be experiencing respiratory alkalosis, this may have the patient have seizures, numbness and tingling, hypokalemia, hyperventilation, confused and tachycardia. The patient also had a high hematocrit which is commonly found in patients with COPD.

5. What are safety considerations when caring for a patient with a chest tube?  



checking the patient’s respiration rate, breath sounds, and oxygen saturation as much as possible. Inspect the dressing and note any drainage present be sure to include the color, consistency and odor. Make sure that the tubing does not have any kinks.

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Asses the skin surrounding the chest tube for any tenderness, redness or swelling.

6. What key elements would you include in the handoff report for this patient? Consider the SBAR (situation, background, assessment, recommendation) format. S: Vincent Brody is a 67-year-old male admitted directly from the provider's office several hours ago for exacerbation of COPD. B: Vincent Brody was have been treateng for exacerbation of the COPD. He is maintaining 02 saturations on 2 L/min of oxygen per nasal cannula. IV of potassium chloride in 5 dextrose and normal saline is infusing at 100 mL/nr in his right arm. He has responded well to medications and treatments and appears to be resting. He was treating with Iv potassium chloride in 5% dextrose and normal saline at 100 mL/hour in his right hand. He has barred chest and signt of clubbing nails. A: The patient vital signs were the following: HR-21, BP: 198/80, Resp: 23, SpO2: 94%, and Temp-99F.ECG monitoring that shows sinus tachycardia. Arterial blood gas drawn indicate was: PH-7.40, HCO3- 26.3, and PaCO2- 49. He was administered albuterol 2.5mg in 3mL normal saline via nebulizer every 20 minutes x 3 doses. Suddenly patient complained of chest pain, on auscultation lung area, there is indication of a possible pneumothorax. Provider came in to put in place a chest tube. R: Continue to monitor the chest tube and vital signs, reinforce patient education, and if any changes occur, notify the provider. 7. What patient teaching priorities would be important in the patient experiencing an acute exacerbation of COPD? It’s important to teach breathing exercises like deep breathing. The importance of Smoking cessation, nutrition and ambulating to avoid further complications. 8. For a patient with COPD who is stable, what resources would you recommend? I would recommend is participating in smoking cessation programs, because it is essential to quit smoking. I would also recommend them to looking into the American lung association, COPD foundation, and if the family wants any support the family caregiver alliance. 9. What would you do differently if you were to repeat this scenario? How would your patient care change? I do not think I would change anything I did in this scenario as in the way of care. What I would change is maybe reacting faster to the patient’s needs.

© Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins...


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